4.7 Article

Fe-Ni-Cu-C-S phase relations at high pressures and temperatures - The role of sulfur in carbon storage and diamond stability at mid- to deep-upper mantle

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 412, Issue -, Pages 132-142

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2014.12.018

Keywords

mantle redox; carbon storage; diamond stability; Fe-Ni alloy; sulfides

Funding

  1. Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering
  2. NSF [OCE-1338842]
  3. US NSF [EAR-1053816]
  4. Deep Carbon Observatory
  5. Division Of Ocean Sciences
  6. Directorate For Geosciences [1338842] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Constraining the stable form of carbon in the deep mantle is important because carbon has key influence on mantle processes such as partial melting and element mobility, thereby affecting the efficiency of carbon exchange between the endogenic and exogenic reservoirs. In the reduced, mid- to deep-upper mantle, the chief host of deep carbon is expected to be graphite/diamond but in the presence of Fe-Ni alloy melt in the reduced mantle and owing to high solubility of carbon in such alloy phase, diamond may become unstable. To investigate the nature of stable, C-bearing phases in the reduced, mid- to deep-upper mantle, here we have performed experiments to examine the effect of sulfur on the phase relations of the Ni-rich portion of Fe-Ni +/- Cu-C-S system, and carbon solubility in the Fe-Ni solid and Fe-Ni-S liquid alloys at 6-8 GPa and 800-1400 degrees C using a multianvil press. Low-temperature experiments for six starting mixes (Ni/(Fe + Ni) similar to 0.61, 8-16 wt.% S) contain C-bearing, solid Fe-Ni alloy + Fe-Ni-C-S alloy melt metastable graphite, and the solid alloy-out boundary is constrained, at 1150-1200 degrees C at 6 GPa and 900-1000 degrees C at 8 GPa for S-poor starting mix, and at 1000-1050 degrees C at 6 GPa and 900-1000 degrees C at 8 GPa for the S-rich starting mix. The carbon solubility in the liquid alloy significantly diminishes from 2.1 to 0.8 wt.% with sulfur in the melt increasing from 8 to 24 wt.%, irrespective of temperature. We also observed a slight decrease of carbon solubility in the liquid alloy with increasing pressure when alloy liquid contains > similar to 18 wt.% S, and with decreasing Ni/(Fe Ni) ratio from 0.65 to similar to 0.53. Based on our results, diamond, coexisting with Ni-rich sulfide liquid alloy is expected to be stable in the reduced, alloy-bearing oceanic mantle with C content as low as 20 to 5 ppm for mantle S varying between 100 and ND ppm. Deep, reduced root of cratonic mantle, on the other hand, is-expected to have C distributed among solid alloy, liquid alloy, and diamond for low-S (<= 100 ppm S) domains and between liquid alloy and diamond in high-S (>= 150 ppm S) domains. Our findings can explain the observation of Ni-rich sulfide and/or Fe-Ni alloy inclusions in diamond and suggest that diamond stability in the alloy-bearing, reduced mantle does not necessarily require excess C supply from recycled, crustal lithologies. Our prediction of diamond stability in the background, depleted upper mantle, owing to the interaction with mantle sulfides, is also consistent with the carbon isotopic composition of peridotitic diamond (delta C-13 of -5 +/- 1 parts per thousand), which suggests no significant input from recycled carbon. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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